The Poems of John Dryden, Volumen1Clarendon Press, 1958 - 2104 páginas Egne digte og oversættelser af klassiske digterværker |
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Página 190
... cou'd they pretend ? How cou'd thy Infant innocence offend ? 125 A guilt there was ; but oh that guilt was mine ! Thou suffer'st for a sin that was not thine . Thy Mothers grief and Crime ! but just enjoy'd , Shown to my sight , and ...
... cou'd they pretend ? How cou'd thy Infant innocence offend ? 125 A guilt there was ; but oh that guilt was mine ! Thou suffer'st for a sin that was not thine . Thy Mothers grief and Crime ! but just enjoy'd , Shown to my sight , and ...
Página 410
... cou'd he lie ; 195 Nor cou'd his Corps sufficient food supply . But he's the Tityus , who by Love opprest , Or Tyrant Passion preying on his breast , And ever anxious thoughts , is robb'd of rest . The Sisiphus is he , whom noise and ...
... cou'd he lie ; 195 Nor cou'd his Corps sufficient food supply . But he's the Tityus , who by Love opprest , Or Tyrant Passion preying on his breast , And ever anxious thoughts , is robb'd of rest . The Sisiphus is he , whom noise and ...
Página 447
... cou'd sustain : Undaunted Cæsar underwent The malice of their Art , nor bent Beneath what e'r their pious rigour cou'd invent : In five such dayes he suffer'd more Then any suffer'd in his reign before ; 175 180 More , infinitely more ...
... cou'd sustain : Undaunted Cæsar underwent The malice of their Art , nor bent Beneath what e'r their pious rigour cou'd invent : In five such dayes he suffer'd more Then any suffer'd in his reign before ; 175 180 More , infinitely more ...
Contenido
Upon the death of the Lord Hastings | 1 |
1693 | 13 |
TRIUMPHANT | 23 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
67 errata 67 text ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL Achitophel Æneid Author Beauty bold call'd CGDb collated copies cou'd Crimes Crowd Crown dare delight design'd Dido Duke of Guise dull e're edition English EPILOGUE and SONGS Ev'n eyes Fame Fate Father fear fight fire flames Foes Fools forc'd Friend Gallants give grace happy hast heart Heav'n Honour hope Jebusites JOHN DRYDEN joyn judge kind King Laws lov'd Love Lovers Lucretius mighty mind Monarch Muse Nakar Nature ne're never Nymph o're once Ovid pain Passions Play pleas'd Plot Poem Poet Pow'r praise Prince Prologue Prologue and Epilogue publick rage rais'd Rhyme Sacred Satyr Sence shou'd sight Soul Tempest thee there's thou thought Town Translation true twas TYRANNICK LOVE Verse Vertue Virgil wind words wou'd writ write Youth ΙΟ